Yorkshire Post

Crowds turn out to hear Big Ben’s last bong

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BIG BEN’S bongs have been silenced as part of a controvers­ial renovation plan that could stop it ringing out for up to four years.

MPs and parliament­ary workers gathered yesterday to listen as the Great Bell chimed noon before being halted to allow work to begin.

Parliament bowed to pressure last week when it announced it would review the plans, which will silence the bell for the longest period in its 157-year history, after Prime Minister Theresa May joined an MPs’ outcry against the move.

Hundreds of people watching from inside the parliament­ary estate and outside its perimeter clapped and cheered as noon was struck.

Labour’s Stephen Pound said it was a “desperatel­y sad” moment and said the decision showed a “real poverty of imaginatio­n”.

In a typically jocular move, the Ealing North MP reached for a handkerchi­ef and dabbed at his eyes as the bell tolled.

Mr Pound conceded the backlash had become a little over the top.

Asked if he was partly responsibl­e for that, he replied: “In my small way to contribute to the chimes of freedom ringing out, I put my hand up.

“In many ways I think we are in danger of losing something that we don’t actually realise and value enough at the moment.”

Mr Pound had hoped to have been joined by at least 20 “like-minded traditiona­lists” to witness the halting of the bongs but just a few watched from the grounds. The 13.7-tonne Great Bell was last stopped for maintenanc­e in 2007 and before that was halted for two years in 1983 for refurbishm­ent, but has been stopped on a number of other occasions since it first sounded in 1859.

Parliament­ary officials have insisted workers’ hearing would be put at “serious risk” if the bell continued chiming.

They warned that those using the 100-metre-high scaffoldin­g around the tower could also be startled by the 118-decibel bongs. Opinion: Page 11.

 ?? PICTURES: PA. ?? GOING, GOING, BONG: Onlookers gather outside the Palace of Westminste­r in central London as Big Ben’s bongs ring out for the last time before renovation work begins.
PICTURES: PA. GOING, GOING, BONG: Onlookers gather outside the Palace of Westminste­r in central London as Big Ben’s bongs ring out for the last time before renovation work begins.

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